SEAT 8, Badge 290: White man, 40s. Said
he resolves disputes between employees
and "I'm a good listener."

SEAT 9, Badge 326: Unemployed male
cement finisher, 40s, white. Said police
treated him fairly when he was once
arrested for drunken driving but has an
open mind about police misconduct.

SEAT 10, Badge 400: White woman, 50s
or 60s, does invoices and pays bills for
legal department at place of employment.
Said her husband thinks Simpson is guilty,
but "we disagree a lot." Daughter was
involved in domestic violence with a
boyfriend. Said she thinks interracial
couples should give careful thought to
having children.

SEAT 11, Badge 88: White woman, 30s.
Said her husband has strong views that
Simpson is innocent but that she wouldn't
discuss case with him.

SEAT 12, Badge 227: White man, 60s,
son of a police officer. Foreman in liability
phase. Said he hoped Simpson was
innocent because he admired him as an
athlete but had concluded Simpson was
probably guilty.

Three remaining alternates:

Badge 206: Retired male lab worker, 60s,
white.

Badge 27: White male.

Badge 295: Black woman, 40s, works for
a medical corporation.

SANTA MONICA, Calif. - It was the easiest decision one juror ever had to make. Another juror said she was satisfied
beyond a shadow of a doubt. It only took one vote to brand O.J. Simpson a killer, and it was unanimous.

Jurors who spoke Monday exuded nothing but confidence: about the nature of their deliberations, about their verdicts, about
themselves.

"For me, what I needed to be able to walk out of that room was not just a reasonable doubt, but beyond a shadow of a doubt
and I was willing to stay there for a month if that's what it took to answer all of those questions for myself," said a white
woman in her 40s.

The jurors said they carefully examined the evidence, deliberated with logic and compassion, and never let race influence their
decision.

"Finding O.J. Simpson liable of the murders and acting with oppression and malice was one of the easiest decisions I have
ever had to make," said juror Laura Fast-Khazaee, a white woman in her 30s.

Jurors said they took 12 hours to reach a verdict on Simpson's liability because they meticulously went through the evidence.
They didn't take their first vote until the very end - and found out they were unanimous.

"We had to break down everything and examine everything and have a clear conscience," said a white man in his 30s, the
foreman in the punitive phase.

But the only black member left on the panel, an alternate who never deliberated, made it clear she disagreed.

This juror, who heard the same evidence as the others, felt Simpson got a bad deal, that there was doubt galore, that police
probably planted evidence, that a real killer is probably on the loose and that her colleagues blew it.

"For the most part, I felt Simpson was pretty credible," said the black alternate in her 40s. "The plaintiffs were more like
bullies than professionals."

As for her main doubt: "One person couldn't have done this by himself."

Her views were drowned out by the eight other jurors and alternates who met with reporters after the panel was dismissed
from service Monday. The jurors appeared on TV, but all didn't give their names. Six jurors, including the foreman for the
liability phase, didn't attend the news conference.

For all but the lone black alternate, the plaintiffs' case was proven far beyond the legal standard of a preponderance of the
evidence.

They all said the most compelling pieces of evidence were the blood drops and the photos of the Bruno Magli shoes. They
also said Simpson could not be believed.

"I thought that 'Kato' Kaelin was more credible," said a white man in his 20s.

The white woman in her 40s said she opened the discussion about a compensatory damage award by suggesting $24 million -
$1 million for each of the 24 years that Goldman's father, Fred Goldman, likely had left in his life.

In discussions, that was whittled down to $8.5 million.

The $25 million punitive award reached Monday was even easier to calculate, they said. It represented the same amount that
the plaintiffs said Simpson stood to earn during the rest of his life.

"We all felt that Simpson had the potential to make a lot of money in the future," said a white woman in her 20s. "We didn't
buy the defense's argument that he's washed out and worthless."